7,096 research outputs found
Absolute absorption and fluorescence measurements over a dynamic range of 10 with cavity-enhanced laser-induced fluorescence
We describe a novel experimental setup that combines the advantages of both
laser-induced fluorescence and cavity ring-down techniques. The simultaneous
and correlated measurement of the ring-down and fluorescence signals yields
absolute absorption coefficients for the fluorescence measurement. The combined
measurement is conducted with the same sample in a single, pulsed laser beam.
The fluorescence measurement extends the dynamic range of a stand-alone cavity
ring-down setup from typically three to at least six orders of magnitude. The
presence of the cavity improves the quality of the signal, in particular the
signal-to-noise ratio. The methodology, dubbed cavity-enhanced laser-induced
fluorescence (CELIF), is developed and rigorously tested against the
spectroscopy of 1,4-bis(phenylethynyl)benzene in a molecular beam and density
measurements in a cell. We outline how the method can be utilised to determine
absolute quantities: absorption cross sections, sample densities and
fluorescence quantum yields.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, submitted to J. Chem. Phy
Erythrocytes in multiple sclerosis: forgotten contributors to the pathophysiology?
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disease characterised by lymphocytic infiltration of the central nervous system and subsequent destruction of myelin and axons. On the background of a genetic predisposition to autoimmunity, environmental triggers are assumed to initiate the disease. The majority of MS research has focused on the pathological involvement of lymphocytes and other immune cells, yet a paucity of attention has been given to erythrocytes, which may play an important role in MS pathology. The following review briefly summarises how erythrocytes may contribute to MS pathology through impaired antioxidant capacity and altered haemorheological features. The effect of disease-modifying therapies on erythrocytes is also reviewed. It may be important to further investigate erythrocytes in MS, as this could broaden the understanding of the pathological mechanisms of the disease, as well as potentially lead to the discovery of novel and innovative targets for future therapies
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Oxygen isotopic constraints on the origin and parent bodies of eucrites, howardites, and diogenites
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Oxygen Isotopic Constraints on the Number and Origin of Basaltic Achondrite Parent Bodies
Our data show that HED meteorites have a homogeneous oxygen isotopic composition consistent with a magma ocean on Vesta. Ibitira, Asuka 881394, Pasamonte, and NWA 1240 probably come from separate parent asteroids
Next-generation sequencing reveals broad down-regulation of microRNAs in secondary progressive multiple sclerosis CD4+ T cells
Background Immunoactivation is less evident in secondary progressive MS (SPMS) compared to relapsing-remitting disease. MicroRNA (miRNA) expression is integral to the regulation of gene expression; determining their impact on immune-related cell functions, especially CD4+ T cells, during disease progression will advance our understanding of MS pathophysiology. This study aimed to compare miRNA profiles of CD4+ T cells from SPMS patients to healthy controls (HC) using whole miRNA transcriptome next-generation sequencing (NGS). Total RNA was extracted from CD4+ T cells and miRNA expression patterns analyzed using Illumina-based small-RNA NGS in 12 SPMS and 12 HC samples. Results were validated in a further cohort of 12 SPMS and 10 HC by reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). Results The ten most dysregulated miRNAs identified by NGS were selected for qPCR confirmation; five (miR-21-5p, miR-26b-5p, miR-29b-3p, miR-142-3p, and miR-155-5p) were confirmed to be down-regulated in SPMS (p < 0.05). SOCS6 is targeted by eight of these ten miRNAs. Consistent with this, SOCS6 expression is up-regulated in SPMS CD4+ T cells (p < 0.05). This is of particular interest as SOCS6 has previously been shown to act as a negative regulator of T cell activation. Conclusions Ninety-seven percent of miRNA candidates identified by NGS were down-regulated in SPMS. The down-regulation of miRNAs and increased expression of SOCS6 in SPMS CD4+ T cells may contribute to reduced immune system activity in progressive MS
Astrophysical Constraints on Modifying Gravity at Large Distances
Recently, several interesting proposals were made modifying the law of
gravity on large scales, within a sensible relativistic formulation. This
allows a precise formulation of the idea that such a modification might account
for galaxy rotation curves, instead of the usual interpretation of these curves
as evidence for dark matter. We here summarize several observational
constraints which any such modification must satisfy, and which we believe make
more challenging any interpretation of galaxy rotation curves in terms of new
gravitational physics.Comment: References added, submitted to Classical & Quantum Gravit
Absolute fluorescence and absorption measurements over a dynamic range of 106 with cavity-enhanced laser-induced fluorescence
We present a novel spectroscopic technique that exhibits high sensitivity and a large dynamic range for the measurement of absolute absorption coefficients. We perform a simultaneous and correlated laser-induced fluorescence and cavity ring-down measurement of the same sample in a single pulsed laser beam. The combined measurement offers a large dynamic range and a lower limit of detection than either technique on its own. The methodology, dubbed cavity-enhanced laser-induced fluorescence, is developed and rigorously tested against the electronic spectroscopy of 1,4-bis(phenylethynyl)benzene in a molecular beam and density measurements in a cell. We outline how the method can be used to determine absolute quantities, such as sample densities, absorption cross sections, and fluorescence quantum yields, particularly in spatially confined samples
AzTEC Millimetre Survey of the COSMOS Field - II. Source Count Overdensity and Correlations with Large-Scale Structure
We report an over-density of bright sub-millimetre galaxies (SMGs) in the
0.15 sq. deg. AzTEC/COSMOS survey and a spatial correlation between the SMGs
and the optical-IR galaxy density at z <~ 1.1. This portion of the COSMOS field
shows a ~ 3-sigma over-density of robust SMG detections when compared to a
background, or "blankfield", population model that is consistent with SMG
surveys of fields with no extragalactic bias. The SMG over-density is most
significant in the number of very bright detections (14 sources with measured
fluxes S(1.1mm) > 6 mJy), which is entirely incompatible with sample variance
within our adopted blank-field number densities and infers an over-density
significance of >> 4. We find that the over-density and spatial correlation to
optical-IR galaxy density are most consistent with lensing of a background SMG
population by foreground mass structures along the line of sight, rather than
physical association of the SMGs with the z <~ 1.1 galaxies/clusters. The SMG
positions are only weakly correlated with weak-lensing maps, suggesting that
the dominant sources of correlation are individual galaxies and the more
tenuous structures in the region and not the massive and compact clusters.
These results highlight the important roles cosmic variance and large-scale
structure can play in the study of SMGs.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
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